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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1880-11-12, Page 3- - -In the Limetick'market, a. 'Mae who had ' taken a farm from whieli another hadbeen evicted for non-peyneent of rent offered butter and oats- for sale, but= -one would buy, and he had te take home his produce, amid grow:is-and hootings. - • • - A faresereof Belturbet, Cotinty Cavan, - 'ordinarily. a quiet part of Ireland, was lately killed in it. dispute about right of way through ae beff,:' ,His head was almost - severed frOM es body by. a billhook. TWO neighbors- n net- Ilevvitt, father and eon, have been ar -sted. . . ' , - ere • An old man named Patrick Malone,. who • kept a publichouse in Leine ter street,Athy, wed who had beeh ailing for some time past,. got Out of bed,a.nd niistaking, it is supposed, the window of his roeed for the: doorway; walked through it and fell into, the street, "where - he was found perfectly .lifeless a . short time afterthe occurrence. ' -s •.. Mr. W. 'Brock, a respectable farmer re - Siding at Ballycommon, near Pliiiipstown, - lodged information to the effect that a valuable colt, his property, was., shot dead on his land a few*days ago. A short time - since a- farni -was sold by the executors of a -•- deceased person for the benefit Of minors. • 'There was not the slightest -Objection to • the sale, and Mr. Brock wee declared the purchaser. He weea.Meeee threatened, but as he is pepulare -I* neighborhOod did • not -mind it T *Wake has-caueed gen- eral indignation. 'VV. One Saturday igKfitly about 100 police ,1leett.74i at Ballsktfirotect David Seats, a - T.-77 officei; ha' serving .30 Civil bilhe ila5., X ebe legal 2cis-r.als related to land or )res e -e- of rent. They left for the_villa,ges • ,igh, Neale and Burne: Crowds of eemen and children . groaned and pelted . - them with Mud, but'scarcely any violence , was displayed. Of 30. processes only one was setved;Ithe Process-server.having been empty. ,- . . i 1 ' expected the doors were closed or. taken away, the fires extinguished and the houses A MINER'S NERVE. "If I Don't Come Back 111 Fifteen Min- utes Shut the Shaft Forever." The Gold Hill (Nev.) News says: There are no braver men in the world than can be found among the mines of the Com- stock. Accustomed to face dangers every day of their lives they never shrink from the call of duty. An instance of -personal bravery occurred recently at the Hale & Norcross, which is worthy of record as showing what men will do and dare. When the pump column ie the mine burst, the low of water which is usually pumped at the Hale & r,Noreross, a large portion of which eQmes from the well known north drift on the 2,200 level of the " Savage " and is very hot, was sent through connections to the C. N. S. shaft to be raised to the Sutro tunnel level. One day this flow of water was unusually strong. The pumps labored assiduously to keep it down, bite labored in vain. Bail- ing tanks were added, and still the accu- mulation could not be kept down. When the 2,400 station at that shaft was sone three feet under water, information was sent to the Hale ce Norcross of the fact; and a desire was expressed to know the cause of the increased flow. The neces- sity of an investigation thus became im- perative. * * Superin- tendent Deidesheimer, not knowing what might have happened in that confined _locality to threaten the -safety of the mine on the lower levels, and. not wishing to send men where he was unwilling to go himself_ and see what was wrong, Mr. Kellogg would net allow Mr, Deidesheimer to incur the risks of the exploration,-aied set about preparing to go alone. Het saturate& a vroollen shirt with ice -water and:bound it on and over his head, leaving but a single ey _nosed. He then Muffled both hands an thus prepared entered the drift, leav- ing with the superintendent a request that if he did not return in fifteen rmuuthathe drift should be closed behind hire to be :opened no more. - This could well be done, as the- Savage- had trulkhead- ed that level, the air had been shut out and •the workings there preetically abandoned. After enduring that terrible heat for twelve -minutes Mr Kellogg came. back and reported nothing amisi. The ex- tra water was but an unusually large inter- 'mittent flow from the old meth drift in Savage.. When stripped of :his muftliegs Mr. Kellogg found that in some way one of his handshadbecome bared while he Was in the drift, and the back of it.hed been learned to a. solid blister by the -dry; hot air • to whichhe had been exposed. Water . boils on the Conisteekin1;98-degrees, and he had sustained for twelve mitutes atempera- ture only -forty degreee below that ef boil- watele—and sufficient to have roasted aim in verir, sn or b ee.e. e • • 4. TERRIIII.E FALL. •- DeSeent front the It:Op Of an Elevator to the Rocks litelow--Death Alaimo • I• n- stantaneous. • . - . crime. Oct, 27.7 —Mr. Louis Partial's, a stevedore -residing- in St Sauveur, was this morning accidentally killed by falling front trig- grating of the elevator on to the rocks below. It seems that : the tinfcirta- nate man hadbeen on thaDurham'Terrace about 6:30 this morning, and • in -looking over the railiug his bet dropped on the upper window -grating on the roof Of the elevator.- In trying to -recover the hat hQ got -o.Yer the railing, lest _his balance and • slid dewn the roof.ef the elevator -until he reached about the centre, where his rapid descent was interruptedby a Anew guard-, and -by Which he was , knocked from the roof of the structure on to the rockgbelow. A woman named- Whelan, residing in e..Sousle--Fort-etreet, saw the accident, and promptly gave the alaim. When _picked up thpoorfellow was 37 -et alive, but -.al- most immediately. expired.. He was about 60 years of . age, and - leaves a. wife and - - - • - Irish Notes. _ The Irish Constabulary have -forwarded 'a requisition for mare buckshot, - - Texan fever has Made iteeeppearanee • among some cattle at Tiptree, wad several horses have died. from it, - . . 'Lord • :teshtown, who- died last month, would net allow any of his tenantry toseek aid freiri any relief fend last Winter, To all Who needed help he gave it. About 500 tenants, each wearing a white sda.rfe fel- loWed. him to the grave. . The I ing *resi • tempt Molt keeper was sh his an of this years a fash and s man o he soo able and w man o someti lega ba was st Mr. aympa the ne left th was an and th others from h quentl and s which Hamil in• th default about acquai wife, a This Iv Ied co t to set Mrs. L Boston ter, ha there, had se the girl • convent wealth robberi Ito - 13ayl and Cri 'hat on e. man or:1.1 *musical and tv 1 reende ions se ing the The: - _in th comma to perfo sliately the mo that ev Jarge-q and put With vel wooden organic ber of s u;poit t spies, behind such a h aild ell h C IMINAL'S CAREER. istory of a New York *hoot - S —Row a Convict Duped Mon. 144 deity. , Oct. 27.—Ned Lyons, who at - to hoot Hamilton Brock, a saloon ew York on Sunday last, and a d fatally wounded in return by o4 st, was a well-known resident ty- with his family two or three On coming here he put up at a. le hotel, living in good style- d g plenty of money. Being a ed cation and refined manners,. aje friends and got into fashion - y. He speculated largely, u posed to be an English gentle - w alth. After he had been here burglary occurred at the Hoche - hen a large amount of money' n Of course no one suspected n and he was one of the ziig wil� called on- the manager rning. It was only after he ti that the detectives found he sc ped convict from Sing Sing, h planned and executed with 1 urglary at the bank.. He went New York, and was subse- • d for burglary, found guilty er ed to the penitentiary, from lad only just been released. Brock, the other actor agedy, having become a i Boston, toOk refuge here •e Lyons left. -ale soon got ith the lattee's pretty young arkied on a liason with her. ti, origin of the quarrel which sl oting,Lyons having threatened tie Brock When he -got free; g after leaving this city, went to h e she became a noted charac7 1,1 iried to - blackmail hentleinen some cases succeeded., They al hildren, and at -present two of • being educated at one of the n this ,province: Lyons 15 very o the fruits of his numerous -1 - " • D • member Winnip ships, so _Mountai clair . re surveye 'soil. • T some go immens ed. .in fine sa, consists, I. Game of -elk bein of which -I& -herd, IL - geese we e be: kille Badgers Therew the lee Turtle dement. rgan was Made in the 13ili Us, in his famous Historical a Dictiouary (voterii., p.33 note), Ccasion the Abbot De Baigne, ✓ at wit, who. had invented.many umeuts Waited - on Louis XI * 1.1 his service. The king cane once to. procure 'him harinen- rom the °ries of hogs; imagin- e was absolutely empoesible. De .13aegee - was not 1 eat perplexed. at Such a ut asked the king for money • , The einoney was imam- ered to :him; and be effected u prising and remarkable - thing s seen He get together. a ty Of hogs, all of different. ages, • in it, tent or pavilion covered t, efore which tent there was. painted,all and he made an n trument, with a certain num - s contrived that when he hit e stops it answered te - some , pricking the hogs that stood order, inadethem cry in nions manner that the kinel endantswere delighted with it r Fertile -Northwest. . o n Sinelair, D L S, and the f is party recently returned to om subdividing eight town - e 5 miles north-west of Turtle i the Souris district. Mr. --Sin,, that the soil in:the locality dark loath with a clayey Sub - glen is well watered, with t u ber. Seine swamps; tuid an • a me intersect the area. survey,: der is what is believed to be lee quarry. The arable land general rule, of tolling praixie. iede is plentiful; antelope and erous, especially the former, ere observed one day - in a- . Prairie chickens and _wild So very' plentiful, and could - 3 throwing stones at them, e e to bee -seen-. In hendreds. ly one squatter obsereed in • y but to: the -south-east, near ain, there is quite a. largo set- • Ai ere who live was keen night's Mark: "Ice eine" "what: ole -man ? -nice bath -."/ce gv to be der. "You You. Cate • " " Whit - angel? I me,*nin' too -fine fee say 1"-t—Dk Bradst Alvinstote essigned dry goods Galt, C. D. A.. Ye4 DA. You drugs, so/4 general ate 11. T. Smi be closed son & Co., Jannet, A. Wolveri A Pito Humplire Caledonia ship, has variety le teen' barr shipnaent picking fr wind -falls, tree. The of apples sterling pe produced in the Livel barrels for orchard �t well 7 A produce a • 67,000 at Vie is Articulation: r of the Lime 'Kiln Club, hie street, in " Kentucky," his wife to.bring in Monday g, ,.be took omaeion to re- . to be in dat tub afore maw,• - - gwine to get. in clef tub- for, 't you.- 'member you had:a e weeks ago la,s' Sunday'?" e to he dar, Itell you ; ecegwine want to go in dar, ole Mari. deg a _cold.? matter wid you, youbrazil nee to form in de tub ' eyou. 16' my artickerlation• indefinite comprehensioia? b Free Press-. • - tRusiness Changes. - • i -vee the following in Ontario: s McPherson, general stare, st. Chatham, J. J. Auger, eeded Auger & Co. mimes, books and stationery;' ns adrnitted-now C. W. & . London, e*.rthur F. Salter; t. Oaleleral; *John Proper, ernoved to Paris. Toronto, lumber, etc., advertised to eriff. Wolverton; S. Daw- ral stets, 'Wolverton & Mc- , imelgainated-e-style now CO. --- :--The New Orleans Picayene thinks that ' a man, like a razor,is made -4 keen by being frequently strapped. = ' BRITISH AND FOREIGN. A London tailor has invented "the united suit," which consists of a man's complete attire in one garment. A recent report shows that the increase in the consumption of horse and ass flesh is large and steady in France. *The Elgin Courant says that, as usual after a good herring season, the matrimon- ial business is extraordinarily active on the eoast of Scotland. Lewis Irwin displeased his parents, at Gallipolis, . Ohio, and while his mother pounded him with a club, his- father shot him with a pistol. The latest novelty at the New York Aquarium is a hippopotamus, said to be the largest yet imported. It measures twelve feet from head to tail, and weighs a ton. There are at present many opium eaters in literary and artistic circles hirer* and the practice is said to be gaining 'ground. In the English literary world there are to -day none: De Quincey remains the champion opium eater of literary England. The ex -landlady of a tavern at Hereford, during a quarrel with her husband, " bob- bed "her tongue at him to annoy. him, when the husband, Whose domestic felicity, it is said, has been anything but a bed of roses,bit off the end of it. to theextent of about an inch. ; The woman, who has suf- fered considerably, has declined. to prose- cute. Andrew Johnsen and his bride were On their heneymoon journey. He awoke her in a sleeping car, on the New:York Central railroad, and told her to take cake of his. revolver, as he did not like to have it with- in teach. She ;put .it into a satchel, and fell asleep, to be again erofised when her 'husband killed hinlielf. • Miss Annie Butler, the daughter of a wealthSheffield' tradesman, eloped a few days ago With Henry Burton, her father's gook, in.ignatance that Burton was a tflar- eied man with two children. Miss . Baler was married to him at Belvoir street Chapel, Leicester, but She has since re- turned home. Burton has been arrested on charge et bigamy. . , _ . ; - . The Czar's _recent trip to LiVadia was guarded by forty: thousand men statioeed along the line Ho Is more , afraid elf assasein-a teen than Cvee, The programme of his proceedings is made publicand then. altered. He does not sleep twice in .suce cession in-theme:nu chamber, and takes his meals at different places and hours -frbre those expected. - • - - Eastern -men visiting the Rocky Monn- tains generally under-e-stiniatethe strength and -ferocity of ;ciena,nion beers of . that region, and lives are frequently lost in con sequence - A recent - instaneeavae that . of _- - pthierceees.ema.teu.f hunters rs. •:near . Deadwood They foolishly drove a bigbear into e cor ner, and one of them Was instantly torn to • , . Sir. Ecitierd Denny ie to make - an •- in-- tetesting experiment on his . Irish -estates. He offerstogrant leases for ever be the oc- cupying tenants on the Deeny estates, eted it is understood that the rents will be the earne as -those fixed in 1829. It is expected that the tenants, who are generally in comfortable -circumstances, will gliedl avail themselves of this offer. I BLOODY ESSICEE. Terrible Experiences of South African • Colonists. , MANY TORTURED TO DiATIL Several Missionaries Muritered. LONDON, Oct. 29.—News received here this morning from South Africa represents the condition of things there as growing daily worse. Intelligence from Col. Clarke's force,which is operating againit the Basuto., is infrequeet, owing to the -6utting of the telegraph wires in his rear Sy the rebelliors natives, which necessitates the forWarding, of despatches from Itim- by way of the steamer from D'UrbanHo the Cape. The latest is that .Col. ClaileS at- tacked Lerothodi's village on Mondfy last, carried it by • storm and subsepently burned it to the ground. Many patives were killed or wounded, and the $thers flednorth. Froin other. quartets the information is not so favorable, and, it is regarded here as a mere_question of 4 week or so before the colonial authoritiesiy-rill he compelled to ask for the aid .Of ineperial troops. lit Griqualand matters arerOecom- ing worse every day. Several magitrates have been murdered and the nati, es are vowing .vengeauce on all. who support the Government. One by one are joinieg the insurrection; the lest being Unditeliswas, who ha,s combined:his force with Unitalo's, and the two are raiding the country., ithin eight of Unalala.' From Shawbitty the report comes- that the Rev. Mr. Dais has been murdered and that -other outrages have been committed., 'A force 04 2,000 leirgliebrhati been called out :by tha -Cape authPrities and volunteers are ,als& beieg enrolled &ed. -forwarded to Troeskjil. Re- inforcements for the north will be s et by the steamer Melrose, WhichleaVes thi Cape toembrrOwe- . , : . - • -- „e- jt1 - : Leree.---eThe minor that Cot* C1ar0 had had a fight With .-the 'native insurgeits at. Natal has been confirieed by thee-greeifyieg -inteligence that - the force under biAc.onie mail .had *on a decisive' victory 4;-. ter a, bat contest of two beers; After con -:derae bleskirniishing, during which botlej enksi Of Col. Clarke's command were theee' ened,1 a, desperate charge was made, in'eht4h the previnaal troops carried ,eVerythitgelefore., tleeni.:-. The rebels were everywhet. re- pulsed, with the., siflgie exceptiong‘' the receet disaster to the yeomanry, eii _.".Mafee ting has been relieved with but filial, loss to the provincial force.. The ,Bielutose on the other hind, -admit e loge ,;:ei -30.0, men killed and many :more wde!edeel. . Additional details received fronij.pape - Town, in reference to the recent upiling of . _. - ' ti. tribes which haie joined:the Basuto , n re- bellion, state thatthese tieegherous tebels, while profeseing leyalty, surroendkethe Europeans and. • murdered :tbem.", The 4 magretrates who were captured b flthern , -1 were submitted to special tortures tilefeiee beingkilled, the natives meanwhile-Slecute . ing a, war dance. . The horrors of .thqtrias- sacre.haie only found partial relief lin the public niiiid by the gratifying andir ex-- pected news of Col. Clarke's victory.-! .-` the assistance of a brig which was hoisting signals of distress. Before the vessel was • reached, however, the lifeboat capsized and only two of her crew were saved. The disaster occurred in full view of the people on shore. Serious floods have been report- ed e..t Barnbury, Bournemouth, Chester, Coleshill, Derby and Darlington. Thous- ands of acres of lands are inundated in Leicestershire. Telegraphic communica-tion in the neighborhood of Edinburgh has been; interfered with, owing to the blowing down of the lines. PARIS, Oct. 29.—Seven hours continuous rain fell yesterday in Reggio di Calabria, Italy. Seventeen persons were killed in the neighboring villages by cottages being swept down. A German brig has been wrecked on Cape Geis* Nez and eight persons drowned. , - A HORRIBLE STORY. — Row George Wheeler "Choked his Para- mour to Death—The Murderer Gives Inn:melt- Up, after ranching the Body to a Trmik. -I' George Wheeler, about 35 years of Age gavehimself into custody on Wednesday nigh! last last at San Francisco, Cal., on charge of Murder, and proceeded to nee- oroaotei tees. _Wheeler's wife is it, year older e shocking story with unparalleled • than himself. They were married in. Bos- ton eleven years egg. His father is a sec- ond adventiat minister in Gorham, Xe. His wife's' sister, Delia ,Tilson, 21 years old, went With Wheeler and -wife from . Bostan to New York three years ago and _ lived in the same room with them, though.7 Mrs. Wheeler discovered illicit relations . between !Wheeler and Delia, who had then become a, Mother. Since that . time another child was the fruit of the guilty relationship, though the children died or were killed* by Wheeler. All con- , tinii d to ,leve together, andcameto San , Francisco six Months Age, where Wheeler ken an ;engine. While he Was there -Delia . rece. ed attentions from George Hickham. This!aroused the jealousy of Wheeler, who . arra ged that Delia should accompany hits to Siun1Freneisce, Where Mrs: Wheeler join,. * ed them:efterreceiying a remittance. Riek- . ham visited Delia in San Francisco, and paid;her attentions, taking her to tide and to pl 4ces of amusement, staying out pretty . late. /licensed by jealousy Wheeler formed the esperate resolve to take her lifsrather than see her lite with -the man he called a gam ler mild blackleg. In his own words .! "She- seemed to - feel the disgrace very. keen1y begged me to mut her throat. . • She i not -waet to go evith Ilicklianr, tut such was his influence Over her that she ust . go with him, and she. said she woul rather die than -do it. Then she . again asked me to cut her throat. I . told her 1 could net do- that, as I could net bear 10 see her bleed, but I told her :that I coujIcl choke -her. She said -very well, and II t in my tap. i- placed one hand on her ruiutli, aid with the other grasped her hteatJ and she throwing her head back -.. la on My -shoulder died like a child. She truggled but little at first. She looked into y eyes, and I, kissing them, told her t *lose them, which she did, and thus sheeised away. When I found that she was eed II opened her trunk, and taking 6i -ft I4r clothes placed her in it: - She was - a slight, delicate little girl, and I doubled. up -1166 lege and gotl her in without any troub e.r " sey did You piece her in the" trunk? Did yi. . ..6 tend. escaping?" ' t . "-Oh, no,treplied Wheeler, " I never de-- . sired to escape, and I put her into the ' trunk sci that she would be out of the way if Hickleinaceine into the &erne I -did not - want the Man to see her. I thee, in the evenkg, gathered ner Papers and e, little y _Tet Premier ofCape Colony telekepts as follows : ".The village of :the auto , chief; Lerothodi, wasstormedand iirned on the .241d. l'he rebel teems - were.; can. sidereble. Our less was one killed •erel ten wounded. -Vehinteere are inovin# it+ the Transkei district to suppress thttei teak in. which Welsh, the .magestrate; waounii•-• -clered.1" ' - - . A cUeeetch from Cape _town - saYklit-is repelled that four reigeiOnariee ha- • also, been murdered by:the-natives. . •sack of hers and to the bay prison " , Tho Marquis of Stafford, M. P., eldest son of the Duke and Duchess of Sutherz land, is to marry Miss Iterford, daughter. of air. William Harford. TM -young lady was one of the London beauties of last seesoneand almost the only one of -whom ilothing was said in the newspapers. "Lord Stafford :has been _staying with Mr. and Mrs:. Harford at Parley Wood, their 'place in Sernersetshire, near Wrighton. - Ctematien .hage• hPoonie so frequent at Milan that it has:been-decided, tobuildby the side of the eiereation fermi* ein the • cereetery -a cinerary temple. or ash •house, inwhich the ten:tains: of the cleatl may be • deposited and labelled off in jars made like the -old Latin.:prdli.--" gilsai press is itt -favor of tile new ;temple. The . architects -have -handed: in, their_ plans, and they liaveb een approved .hr -the -city rities! - - . • " - . • . . Withie the Week beforethelast • mail kite there were /le less that'sixperiOns itt civilized England Whb- had murdered their -wives: • And on the .other hand we hear of .devoted wife' hurling a- lighted. paraffine temp her husband, disabling hint with the NOW,' pouring the inflammable -Oil all over hig penal*, and setting him completely in'hanies...- Another Wife had Struck bus.: .band—whose ontylault waethat he was 77 years' old—with•a .brass candlestick on . the head killing Iiiin at came,. - - . _ . . e E. F. Loigeau hie Upon the idea of pees - ging goal dust and coil. smell balls for: fuel: .He ipatented. the propose.: and formed a stock company. The inaeuface ture was begun • in Philadelphia five Years. The pressed feel, as it -Wes 'called, was far cheaper. then: male and -about as good for sonie purposes; but the public did not 'accept it readily, and.a;capital of §.200,-- 000 was -gradually lost. 'Saving '--rtibled )1ites-elf financially, and Whig censured by Some of the -stockholders, LOjegieer:look so heavy a deed of landannte thiellis life -was saved with neuela- difficult*. . . Shortly . -after the war in the United DADS, fermis pheiving -near the battle Ids used to hit On a buried: 'bombshell tle thSplewepoint, and all, -their ..egricel-- telefferts would end in- sneokee These tie .• inoidegi';• had a very discouraging cot on tberutal: It seems at philanthropy - to receive inilar check: Thei Chiligai eioop--Cave- nga picked up an einpty. beat and While amining: it, the .apparently inoffensive at exploded. slid Sank steam 7-14106p.. e Moral Of this be tdo reedy ie *leg doubtful ecqueniritencei • • . More of our girls should learn to play that est of ineitiminetite; the :We have en ladies wtio - were graceful of o bow, but their-nenliberiii this country -few: 7 In ::Boston - there •one Belida ere two hundred. young -evoinenetake sons hi -Tian if . a p.ortion of r.girds would totheviolin insteed Of rending at the :Oiano:thcar,--s. Wit division of ;abet, and they would be le to give -118.- a more varied programme the drawing -room As things now are have -Piano music ad numeum. St fie wi tu lit eff th si do ex bo Th TREE•111.r. Norris In ose farm is situated near the ray.statiOn, in• Seneca town- fie apple tree of the Baldwin se hich he has gathered neven- inerchantable -apples for is t e Liverpool Market; besides wh the , ground five barrels of les rfo.f. the crop of the same ou .erpo 1 price of that quality dru suaI seVenteen • shillings be rel. Attlii13 rate the apples ab in we 15 011 t mar estic t doe red- - o • tree would. beworth et 1569.39, leaving five e. Who cap say that not' pay the farmer rees like this would - the value of nearly • ael —Sea • we thor!ght you took an interest m my welfare,' said. en •unsucceissful -lover; No, sir," she replied ;-'4 only in your fare- , ens. - e THE TERRIBLE STOR TTLL aiDalleled toss `Q, lay Ship-tvreCk. .. : • j A 1.ikattunaiv' Of the Catinalties—Thotilatuds - -oil' A:cres of Land Under Walter -4. • LONDON, Oct: 29.—Reports are :ccie itm- ally coming .in stating that the gai has been the most severe experienced Le ing' Pile' pest forty _years, 'Nearly all P4 -the seaport towns telegraph that thel„, has been- great destruction to shipping4g The following is -e, summary of casualtke re - from Portland to the Clyde, states tit t. his I ported this Morning: The second 'o, z er of the American barque J. B. Brown, i eued vessel was _driven - eshois :at Broad ll Bay: during the recent- storm. It iscxgoted that - she might be . succeeifally floated off. Ho and • five: of. thet•NreW were 'landed . at .Green :Rock .-frdA" the steamer Clydesdale. A gale of dicePtonal violence raged along the Lincolnshire:e'oast frigate bound from -Hull to Copenha, se, was g t last night, and this morning a. Se:: dieh Cheery d to be in distress off Sutton. With the aid .of a rocket apparatus a IMO, was thrownover the vessel, but the crey4evore unibleto house .it. -.4. lifeboat yrae4then tried to be got -outibut in .consequencert -pf an it. The poor fellOws onboard; .who rt uld accident it was fOundimpOssible to troll be heard piteously crying :for help;)3were obligedite he left to their fate. At Gri*isby many -Vessels are lying along the coagtilligh and city, in a manner never seen Wifore. Iii, Sixty' ships are ashore 13etween. pg, Oy and.Tilney Ilaven,and,.180 between GI- ims. by and iMadlethoepe. ' ;-. ., _ i - The loseof life is not yet knOwn,.: ut it is believed. to be not *very heavy. IThe Charles Dickens, from Philadelphia, gun:d for . Amsterdarn, was stranded at girlie-. meient,1 One of the erew- was save;and d twelve are still missing. The brig MC ' de Lagos, reim, Fleushurg, was wreeked at Alidresseliti. . Two of her drew only?i#yere. saved and eight are inissieg. •Menytrapiers' are naiesing from Shields' and it is tT red, Monday last, arrived to-dayee Sbee)--eei-. dt that. over forty-two :lives are lest te The State of 'Pennsylvania; dueat. Green --,.i..kon perience.d terrific easterly gales elprifekVes' ines' whole passage, but landed all theca.tk4 .shippekokAt W„aittefrurnr.11 tliwsto„.04jin With e..4:7see"" — . -n 'iee, . thee' '• If. • get4 eft beco 1341, X: . , has been re I i the lose Of• 1 ' her crew of was driSen ral was fi on u Norfolk • " D 'you. not feelanyref:noise ?" . . : . ' " Y s 3 1 d9. . I am -very sorry now that/ - 'did it, but I could - not have her go with that an; I loved her better than my life. • • :She w selways trim to me, While ray wife . • was n t." • - - - - t. , " Y did you not take - your sister -i0- law and leave the city?" ' "She did not want to a9 that. She said that e had not money ,enough. She said she breferre to die, ' :She had repeatedly asked e to kill her Within - the last three _ Weeks. I knew that it would cost me My. life to .11 Delia, but.1 had rather 1011 her than to ' see her with that -man. I was • willing to die. for it - it's a. hard for e. Man. as young and as healthy as I am to throw his life away. .1,It is teerible; tont I • • eould'uot see my Sister-in-law ruined and/ would- willinkly- ley down my -life for her. I want to bait hanged as .quickly as possible. If I had -known as muck about prisons as I . de note I would have taken my Own life . besides that Of - my 'darling yesterday, but .that Diall is to blame for it- all. .- I had to do it a d.I SDI WilLitlic. to suffer for it, . -: , . _ A othettNew Fire Exibienisiaer. . •• A fie vi Invention in the fire extinguishing line W s tested in Brooklyn on. Thursday. aftern on. The system was invented by enginedr John Smith, of the E. D. branch - of the 13rooklyet Fire Department. A. shed . about twelvisi- feet square, and of the Same- - height,was half-filled with barrels of shay- • - lugs sbn. chips. Near the roof was an iron pipe lo the conveyance of water, to the end -iif whi•ih, was attached a -bulb perforated with n xcieroes holes. In the centre of the bulb is Cartridge, held in positione inside •• e plug, tie prevent the water from floviing;- and on the (niter side -is a telegraphic at-:- ' tachm nt. The inflammable material ha' ir ing bee lighted, in thirty-five seconds the -,:t fine of tlle-:oartridge*, became ignited, re! sidling in the explosion 0U:the cartridge; This re Leased the plug in the bulb,- allow- - jig the water free course, and at the IMMO time released the telegraphic attachment and siniticled 'en elermon.an insteurnent i. • adistaiice. The experiment Vertu every . Way satisfactory, as the - fire was extin- guished. with4ut damage to the shed. irf; .....;,- i., ,,,,,,..„ , ,. ., ....E.,..ine ,,AsE OF - '.u.t.was. .E-01S9NING.—A terried•alcase Of milk poisoning- is reported from„- oehdele, England. Upwards of. .1 'planer *.neiies were found t� be linfected, 7 ka jele:kniinn islannilalieliwineL, 32frr phipeusii.iAg ntailkeiaminfroZ _eratirte PliOe ifor cash- - the discovery alt: 11:73frio(61,•_°•115evrciiil' 143tra7Ptili• k141.-fil*171.3,.40:41kSs. 11;i:9a1Alecikiret:gish:e7t:nd OP- ' zei.teeesiada and :the Unite _fit* w oleelej.044,-,- ,s______e • •.:' 'e:15 4 • irOir* -V4 e , •-•.1